A manager at the Weis Market, located at 2850 Carlisle Road, told police video footage showed the infant's father, Donald Edward Blackburn Jr., 30, of Dover Township, entering the store at 7:34 p.m. and running out to the parking lot at 7:39 p.m., documents state.

Blackburn and the baby's mother, Kelsie Louise Flowers, 22, also of Dover Township, said "they went inside the store and had totally forgot that they brought their child ... Blackburn advised that once they had realized that they left (their son) in the car he ran out of the store immediately," documents state.

Northern York County Regional Police arrested Blackburn and Flowers, charging them with endangering the welfare of a child and leaving an unattended child in a motor vehicle, according to online court dockets.

The two were arraigned on the charges and released on $7,500 unsecured bail. They have a preliminary hearing before District Judge David C. Eshbach on July 30, dockets indicate.

Blackburn and Flowers could not be reached for comment on Tuesday.

This isn't the first incident in the area this summer involving a child found in a hot car.

According to charging documents in Sunday's case, a man walking by a blue Toyota Camry in the Weis parking lot just before 7:40 p.m. told police he saw an unattended infant flailing its arms in the back seat, police said.

The vehicle had its doors closed and windows up, the witness said. The temperature outside was 82 degrees, according to police.

The man told police "he was looking around to find any adult that would be responsible for the child but could not locate anyone."

He then waited by the Toyota for about five minutes and still, no one came for the baby, documents state.

Donald Blackburn(Photo: Submitted)

"(The man) opened the door after realizing the vehicle was unsecured and the windows were up in the car ... a short time later, a male, came running out of Weis Markets, toward the car," documents state.

Police had said previously that the Toyota was not running. Police examined the infant and concluded the boy did not have any visible injuries or medical issues, documents state.

Flowers called her mother to pick up the child from the parking lot, and he is now in the care of his grandmother, documents state.

In addition, police contacted York County Children and Youth Services and the state's ChildLine to report the incident, documents state.